Smith is extremely talented to portray such a wide variety of people and their ranging emotions, actions, movements, accents, and the embodiment of their entire characters. They are so different from each other and the fact that she nails each performance so uniquely is so refreshing and different from any of the other plays we have read. She doesn't need actors to do what she was able to do with just herself. That itself is remarkable and gives a fresh twist that makes us even more glued to the performance. Between a stage performance version and a television version, there are different techniques used for each kind which make them very contrasting. For a television performance, editing is all you need to create seamless transitions, so it is much easier to emphasize and go through everything quicker. There are no constraints for timing, or forgetting your lines, because all this can be fixed with editing and multiple takes of each scene. For a stage performance, it is going to be harder to change through each persona, and at times it could get a little awkward between each character transition. A camera can zoom in and out to emphasize certain details that they want to show more than others; the stage performance can't really do this because the audience is far away. We won't be able to see clearly the facial emotions and little details with their mannerisms in a stage performance. Overall, I think these are the key differences between stage and TV, and in my opinion, doing a TV production is better because it can make the impact of the play better to its audience.